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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Hunt v AB [2009] EWCA Civ 1092 (22 October 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/1092.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Civ 1092 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MR JUSTICE BLAKE
HQ06X03909
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WALL
and
LORD JUSTICE MOORE-BICK
____________________
ANTHONY HUNT |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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AB |
Defendant/Respondent |
____________________
Mr Roger ter Haar QC, Mr Anthony Metzer and Ms Sarah Harris (instructed by Messrs Lovells) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 15 and 17 July 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Sedley :
The appeal in summary
The facts
…..
Having reviewed the evidence supplied to me it is my view that there is sufficient evidence to provide a realistic [prospect] of conviction in respect of an allegation of rape. In reaching this decision I have considered the following:-
(1) [AB] made a complaint within 30 minutes of the incident to Barry Young her sub-divisional officer. Mr Young recalls the conversation and states that [AB] appeared to be upset and hesitant and told him in a disjointed way that a traffic warden had raped her. Mr Young's account of the conversation is consistent with [AB's] version of it.
(2) [AB] appeared at work 2 days after the attack in a distressed manner. When pressed by Fiona Medway a work colleague and close friend, [AB] burst into tears and told her that she had been raped by a traffic warden. Again Mrs Medway's statement is consistent with the statement of [AB].
(3) [AB] subsequently confided in a serving police officer PC Whitfield during the summer of 1996 and subsequently to Marie-Claire Whelan a traffic warden and work colleague of Mr Hunt. Both PC Whitfield (now retired) and Mrs Whelan have made statements that are consistent with the statement of [AB].
(4) There is no suggestion that [AB] and Mr Hunt had been having a sexual relationship or that they knew each other on a social basis.
(5) A number of witnesses have described how after the alleged incident [AB's] personality changed. In her statement [AB] states that her work declined and as a result of this her employer offered her counselling for stress which she declined. It would be helpful if evidence could be obtained from [AB's] manager confirming this.
(6) [AB] is described by a number of witnesses as being very reliable and honest. She has confirmed that although initially she felt unable to proceed with the matter she now feels strong enough to give evidence in court. I have spoken to the senior investigating officer Detective Inspector Scott and she has confirmed to me that she considers that [AB] would make a very good witness.
(7) Detective Inspector Scott has confirmed that there is nothing in [AB's] background that is likely to weaken the prosecution case.
In view of the serious nature of the allegation a prosecution is clearly in the public interest.
Q. You never wanted this case to be brought, did you?
A. No.
Q. You made it very clear in your statement of 22 April of last year that you would not support a police prosecution and you would not attend court?
A. That's right.
Q. And you would never yourself have made a complaint, would you?
A. No.
Q. It was Traffic Warden Whelan betraying your confidence?
A. That's correct.
Q. That resulted in the police coming round and taking a statement from you?
A. That's correct.
Q. And even at that point you did not want anything to do with a prosecution?
A. No, I didn't.
Q. Did you then after 22 April of your own free will and volition contact the police?
A. No.
Q. So the police came back to you?
A. Yes.
Malicious prosecution
18. In the circumstances, the Defendant maliciously prosecuted the Claimant.
PARTICULARS OF MALICIOUS PROSECUTION
18.1 The defendant provided information to Hampshire Constabulary which she had concocted and knew to be false. The defendant thereby acted maliciously.
18.2 The Defendant stated her desire to give evidence in court of the matters in question.
18.3 Given the seriousness of the allegation and the difficulty of resolving who was telling the truth, Hampshire Constabulary had no realistic option but to charge the Claimant and allow the criminal justice system to takes its course.
18.4 As the only witness (apart from the Claimant) to what had occurred on 15th July 1995, so that the Hampshire constabulary could not realistically exercise any discretion, the Defendant should properly be regarded as having set the law in motion against the Claimant and be treated as the prosecutor of the Claimant on the basis of the principle in Martin v Watson [1996] A.C.74.
18.5 The Claimant relies on the matters pleaded above. The prosecution was malicious and without reasonable and probable cause.
18.6 The prosecution terminated in the Claimant's favour upon his successful appeal against his conviction.
These proceedings
The action for malicious prosecution
5.1 Rape usually takes place in a private setting where the victim is the only witness. Unless the defendant pleads guilty, the victim will almost certainly have to give evidence in court. Where there is conflicting evidence, the prosecutor has a duty to assess the credibility and reliability of the victim's evidence. This will always be done in a careful and sensitive way, using all the information provided to the prosecutor. A case may not proceed, not because the prosecution does not believe the victim, but because, when considering all the available evidence in the case, there is not enough to meet the evidential stage of the Code test.
……
5.7 Sometimes a victim may withdraw support for a prosecution and may no longer wish to give evidence. This does not mean that the case will automatically be stopped. If the victim has decided to withdraw support for the prosecution, we have to find out why. This may involve delaying the court hearing to investigate the facts and decide the best course of action.
…..
5.14 Generally, the more serious the offence (for example, because of the level of violence used or the real and continuing threat to the victim or others), the more likely we are to prosecute in the public interest, even if the victim says they do not wish us to do so.
Martin v Watson
"(i) It is not essential to prove that the defendant herself was the actual prosecutor in the sense that she personally applied for the warrant that was duly issued by the justices.
(ii) The defendant may be liable if she was actively instrumental by representing herself as the prosecutor or by helping, influencing or urging some other person to set the law in motion. This does not necessarily involve signing a charge sheet or some overt act of that kind.
(iii) On the other hand, it is not enough merely to show that she made a complaint to a police officer which was followed by an application for a warrant by the police officer, even if the complaint was, to her knowledge, quite untrue and the police officer was unaware that it was untrue. The fact that she was lying goes more to the question of reasonable and probable cause and malice."
…. Where an individual falsely and maliciously gives a police officer information indicating that some person is guilty of a criminal offence and states that he is willing to give evidence in court of the matters in question, it is properly to be inferred that he desires and intends that the person he names should be prosecuted. Where the circumstances are such that the facts relating to the alleged offence can be within the knowledge only of the complainant, as was the position here, then it becomes virtually impossible for the police officer to exercise any independent discretion or judgment, and if a prosecution is instituted by the police officer the proper view of the matter is that the prosecution has been procured by the complainant.
Mahon v Rahn (No 2)
267. It appears to me, in the light of these authorities, that it would be unwise to be over-prescriptive in setting out the circumstances in which a lay informant may properly be regarded as the prosecutor, or as one of the prosecutors, for the purposes of the tort of malicious prosecution.
268. A distinction must be drawn between a simple case like Martin v Watson [1996] A.C.74 and a more complex case in which a prosecuting authority such as the S.F.O. or the Crown Prosecution Service is in receipt of evidence from a variety of sources and has to decide in the exercise of its discretion whether it is in possession of sufficient evidence to justify setting the law in motion against the defendant.
269. In a simple case it may be possible to determine the issue quite easily by asking these questions:
(1) Did A desire and intend that B should be prosecuted?
(2) If so, were the facts so peculiarly within A's knowledge that it was virtually impossible for the professional prosecutor to exercise any independent discretion or judgment?
(3) Has A procured the institution of proceedings by the professional prosecutor, either by furnishing information which he knew to be false, or by withholding information which he knew to be true, or both?
270. In the more complex case it is likely to be more difficult to apply these tests, but I would adopt the approach suggested by Richardson J in Commercial Union Assurance Co of NZ Ltd v Lamont [1989] 3 N.Z.L.R. 187, 199 when he said that the tests should be the same when the police had conducted an investigation and decided to prosecute, but that they should be cautiously applied. The reason, of course, is, as he also took into account, that prosecuting authorities are trained and accustomed to consider the evidence placed before them with an appropriately critical eye. Crown prosecutors, for instance, have to be satisfied that there is enough evidence to provide a realistic prospect of conviction, and paragraph 5 of the current Code for Crown Prosecutors describes in clear terms the tests they have to apply before they can allow themselves to be so satisfied.
Other authority
"If it were to suffice that the defendant had done no more than give dishonest evidence upon which the prosecutor relied, the first element in the tort of malicious prosecution becomes otiose; all that would need to be shown would be a causal connection between the provision of the dishonest evidence and the institution or the continuation of the prosecution. This is not the law of England."
The 'first element' to which Hobhouse LJ was referring is the requirement that the civil defendant must have been the prosecutor. If this is right – and it seems to me incontrovertible - it is not legitimate for the claimant in a malicious prosecution action to deduce authorship of the prosecution simply from malice in the supplying and giving of evidence. While the two things may be related, more is needed.
"the one who starts the stone rolling is not necessarily the one who causes the police to prosecute."
The remark highlights how fact-sensitive the prosecutor issue may be, but it does not mean that there is no boundary set by principle.
This case
"A person giving information to the police is by no means necessarily a prosecutor. The question in all cases of this kind must be, who was the prosecutor, and the answer must depend on the whole circumstances of the case."
"The difficulty, therefore, is to find precisely where the balance between those two competing considerations falls, how it is to be assessed and whether there is a single test … or a somewhat broader analysis of all relevant circumstances."
The remaining passage of which complaint is made under this head, at §94-5, follows the conclusion that AB was not the prosecutor. It acknowledges the gap between acquittal and compensation but explains that this is not enough to alter AB's legal position. Rightly, Mr Warby's skeleton argument does not take issue with the formulation of the judge's actual conclusion at §93:
"I have, therefore, no hesitation in concluding on this overall assessment of the evidence against the competing interests of public policy noted earlier that the defendant is not a prosecutor …"
Conclusion on this appeal
Further considerations
Disposal
Lord Justice Wall:
(1) The evidence of Detective Chief Inspector Scott
This investigation was independent from the influence of any party and the consideration for charging was made entirely by the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) and again was independent of meeting AB. I applied a great deal of pressure and influence to make AB provide s statement for the purpose of a criminal investigation. She was consistently reluctant to support the criminal case and I was concerned that she would not support a criminal prosecution and I cannot stress enough how much pressure I put her under to assist the prosecution.
(2) The binding effect of the judgment of this court in Mahon v Rahn (No 2)
In a simple case, it may be possible to determine the issue quite easily by asking these questions: -
(1) Did A desire and intend that B should be prosecuted?
The wider questions
Lord Justice Moore-Bick:
"In action of malicious prosecution the claimant must show first that he was prosecuted by the defendant, that is to say, that the law was set in motion against him on a criminal charge; secondly, that the prosecution was determined in his favour; thirdly, that it was without reasonable and probable cause; fourthly, that it was malicious. The onus of proving every one of these is on the claimant."
"Where an individual falsely and maliciously gives a police officer information indicating that some person is guilty of a criminal offence and states that he is willing to give evidence in court of the matters in question, it is properly to be inferred that he desires and intends that the person he names should be prosecuted. Where the circumstances are such that the facts relating to the alleged offence can be within the knowledge only of the complainant, as was the position here, then it becomes virtually impossible for the police officer to exercise any independent discretion or judgment, and if a prosecution is instituted by the police officer the proper view of the matter is that the prosecution has been procured by the complainant."
"267. It appears to me, in the light of these authorities, that it would be unwise to be over-prescriptive in setting out the circumstances in which a lay informant may properly be regarded as the prosecutor, or as one of the prosecutors, for the purposes of the tort of malicious prosecution.
268. A distinction must be drawn between a simple case like Martin v Watson and a more complex case in which a prosecuting authority such as the SFO or the Crown Prosecution Service is in receipt of evidence from a variety of sources and has to decide in the exercise of its discretion whether it is in possession of sufficient evidence to justify setting the law in motion against the defendant.
269. In a simple case it may be possible to determine the issue quite easily by asking these questions:
(1) Did A desire and intend that B should be prosecuted?
(2) If so, were the facts so peculiarly within A's knowledge that it was virtually impossible for the professional prosecutor to exercise any independent discretion or judgment?
(3) Has A procured the institution of proceedings by the professional prosecutor, either by furnishing information which he knew to be false, or by withholding information which he knew to be true, or both?
270. In the more complex case it is likely to be more difficult to apply these tests, but I would adopt the approach suggested by Richardson J in Commercial Union Assurance Co of NZ Ltd v Lamont when he said that the tests should be the same when the police had conducted an investigation and decided to prosecute, but that they should be cautiously applied. The reason, of course, is, as he also took into account, that prosecuting authorities are trained and accustomed to consider the evidence placed before them with an appropriately critical eye. Crown prosecutors, for instance, have to be satisfied that there is enough evidence to provide a realistic prospect of conviction, and Section 5 of the current Code for Crown Prosecutors describes in clear terms the tests they have to apply before they can allow themselves to be so satisfied."